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Arvind Fashions:₹1,377 Cr Revenue. +14.5% Growth. From “Whose Brand Is This?” to “Finally, It’s Working!”

Arvind Fashions Q3 FY26 | EduInvesting
Q3 FY26 Results · Quarterly Results (Oct–Dec)

Arvind Fashions:
₹1,377 Cr Revenue. +14.5% Growth.
From “Whose Brand Is This?” to “Finally, It’s Working!”

The stock that made investors question their life choices is suddenly growing faster than your Instagram feed during wedding season. Management says “highest YoY growth in several years.” The market is suspicious. Rightfully so.

Market Cap₹5,138 Cr
CMP₹385
52-Week High₹579
YTD Return-32.5%
P/BV5.17x

The Apparel Comeback That’s Actually… Happening?

  • Q3 FY26 Revenue (₹ Cr)1,377
  • YoY Revenue Growth+14.5%
  • Q3 EBITDA (₹ Cr)195
  • EBITDA Margin %14.2%
  • PAT (₹ Cr) ex. One-time44
  • Book Value (₹)74.3
  • Price to Book5.17x
  • ROCE (Latest)16.9%
  • ROE 3-Year Avg3.11%
  • Promoter Stake35.1%
The Setup: Arvind Fashions was the stock your broker recommended when they ran out of sensible ideas. U.S. Polo kept growing but nobody else was listening. Now suddenly — double-digit growth in the worst consumer environment since 2008, EBITDA up 18% YoY, PAT excluding one-time charges up 65% YoY, and the stock down 32.5% in the calendar year. Indian equities in a nutshell. The company bought back Flipkart’s stake in Flying Machine for ₹135 crore. Spoiler: nobody asked for this, but it’s happening anyway.

The Brand You Didn’t Know You Needed. For Every Festival Season, Ever.

Arvind Fashions is what happens when a 100-year-old textile family looks at the fashion market and decides, “Maybe we’ll just buy everyone’s brand and see what sticks.” It’s part of the Lalbhai group — the Ahmedabad people who also run Arvind Limited, a textile behemoth that makes the fabric your U.S. Polo shirt is made from (and then sells you the finished shirt at the retail end). It’s vertical integration, or — as your grandmother calls it — “Apne hee noi hain to kya karoge?”

The portfolio is a who’s who of global brands: U.S. Polo Assn. (the growth engine), Tommy Hilfiger (the premium play), Calvin Klein (the hope-to-God bet), Arrow (the turnaround charity case), and Flying Machine (the Gen Z reinvention nobody asked for). In Q3, they exited the discussion about whether anyone would buy Flying Machine from Flipkart by simply… buying it back themselves for ₹135 crore. That’s the sound of a company that’s either very confident or has zero respect for shareholder capital. Could be both.

Q3 FY26 revenue hit ₹1,377 crore, up 14.5% YoY — the highest growth “in several years,” per management. EBITDA climbed 18% YoY. PAT (stripping out the one-time Labour Code charge) jumped 65%. The concall was genuinely upbeat. The stock tanked 32.5% year-to-date anyway. Welcome to fashion retail, where numbers mean nothing and the colour of the season’s palette is apparently more important than earnings growth.

The Concall Says: Management framed Q3 as “demand environment was stable” with “reasonably confident” growth momentum into Q4. They’re also targeting online sales to reach 25–30% of revenue in the medium term (currently ~24%). Flying Machine will launch its dedicated D2C platform (flyingmachine.com) in FY27. This is investor-speak for “we’re praying Gen Z shows up.”

Selling Dreams (And Occasionally, Shirts)

The business is elegantly simple: import licences for global brands (U.S. Polo, Tommy Hilfiger, Calvin Klein), own brands (Flying Machine, Arrow — kind of), then distribute through a network of ~977 exclusive brand outlets (EBOs), ~9,000 multi-brand outlets (MBOs), department stores, and online. Revenue splits roughly 43% retail, 28% wholesale, 29% online-and-others. They’ve built a “Club A” format (all brands under one roof), “Stride” (footwear), and “Megamart” (outlets). It’s omni-channel with a dash of desperation.

The historical grind: company earned almost zero return for five years (ROE averaged 3% per annum), exited five loss-making brands (Gap, Sephora, Hanes, Ed Hardy, The Children’s Place), and watched U.S. Polo drag the entire portfolio up the stairs single-handedly. Now, post-refocus, the plan is straightforward — U.S. Polo leads, Tommy Hilfiger holds, Calvin Klein compounds, Arrow turns around, and Flying Machine becomes… something. Management’s words: “Gen Z-focused unisex fashion brand anchored in on-trend expression with denim at its core.” Translation: they have no idea what Flying Machine is, but the Gen Z part tested well in focus groups.

The concall revealed that U.S. Polo grew at over 25%, with premiumization working and store-level productivity (LTL) at 11%. D2C is now 63% of sales, up 260 bps YoY, with an aspiration to reach 75%. Online B2C is the new religion, up ~50% in Q3. Arrow, the formal wear anchor, grew in “early single digits” due to supply chain hiccups from Bangladesh. But here’s the kicker: management says Arrow is now profitable post-Ind AS and could hit mid-single-digit EBITDA margins within a year. Spoiler: we’ll believe it when we see the numbers.

💬 Real talk: Have you ever bought from U.S. Polo or Arrow? Or are they brands that exist only in traffic jams on airport roads?

Q3 FY26: The Numbers. (Yes, They’re Real.)

Result type: Quarterly Results  |  Q3 FY26 EPS: ₹1.91  |  Annualised EPS (Q3×4): ₹7.64  |  Full-year FY25 EPS: ₹-1.33 (negative due to one-off)

Metric (₹ Cr) Q3 FY26
Dec 2025
Q3 FY25
Dec 2024
Q2 FY26
Sep 2025
YoY % QoQ %
Revenue1,3771,2031,418+14.5%-2.9%
EBITDA195165187+18.2%+4.3%
EBITDA Margin %14.2%13.7%13.2%+50 bps+100 bps
PAT (Reported)364756-23.4%-35.7%
PAT (ex. one-time)44N/AN/A+65% vs Q3 FY25 normalized
EPS (₹)1.912.002.81-4.5%-32.0%
The Real Story: Revenue growth of 14.5% YoY is solid. EBITDA +18% is better. But reported PAT is down 23% because the company took a ₹29 crore one-time Labour Code provision. Strip that out, and PAT grew ~65%, which is what management keeps emphasizing on the concall. QoQ revenue dipped 2.9% because Q2 had an extra week (52 vs 13 weeks), but sequentially, this is tracking fine. The real concern: ROCE is 16.9%, which is fine-to-decent but nowhere near the “premium brand” levels of Trent (30.7%) or Vedant Fashions (25.9%). P/BV at 5.17x is expensive for a company earning 16.9% ROCE.

Fair Value Range

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